CAUTION!
To paraphrase Bill O'Reilly, you are now entering a no-censor zone that
discusses obscene activity."

The Christmas
movie from Sony Pictures I want to see is Seth Rogan and James Franco rectally
feeding Dick Cheney at the climax of a movie sequel called The Enhanced
Interview: Saving the Homeland One Dick At a Time.

Rogan and Franco have a good track record at getting money for
movies that break taboos. Both are actor/directors not queasy about biological
functions. Rogan co-directed the movie The Interview that's caused an international incident by
having an actor play the real Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un and, among all the
dick jokes, exploding his head into biological goo; and Franco just directed an
excellent film called Child Of God
based on a Cormac McCarthy novel in which a mentally ill, homeless redneck is
shown from behind cleaning his dirty ass crack with a stick and, later, having
sex with a female corpse for whom he has purchased a red dress. Rectal feeding
and/or re-hydration of an actor playing Dick Cheney would not be much of a
hurdle for these brave cineastes.

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While the North Korea movie may be an adolescent and politically
irresponsible comedy, Child of God
is a dark, small-budget gem. The kind of biological/psychological frankness the
film engages in would have never been shown in theaters or on TV before the
cell phone images of torture from Abu Ghraib in Iraq seeped into the American
consciousness. Scenes of red-blooded American men and women torturing naked
male Iraqi prisoners in one of Saddam Hussein's hideous dungeons shocked the
American aesthetic. Sadistic behavior bordering on sodomy as US military
policy? Hey, that doesn't comport with American values!

But, then again, I'm afraid it does.

Scott Haze in Child of God; Dick Cheney; James Franco, left, and Seth Rogan up the creek in North Korea(Image by unknown)PermissionDetailsDMCA

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For this advancement (or degradation) in cultural aesthetics -- at
its worse, there's the film series brand Saw -- we have to thank the advent of cell phone
cameras and government torture facilitators like Dick Cheney, who as a
young man was soft, delicate and privileged enough to willfully avoid service
in Vietnam, but as an old man with a bum ticker became powerful and ruthless
enough to advocate torturing human beings in dungeons with hooks in the ceiling
and drains in the floor to whoosh away all the hosed off blood, piss and sh*t
from the previous eight-hour work shift. Cheney is even cold-blooded enough to
say on Meet The Press he
doesn't care that innocent people were tortured under his program. "I have no
problem as long as we achieve our objective." This is a man comfortable in a
secure and luxurious mansion who has never gotten any torturous biological
matter on him.

Senator John McCain, on the other hand, is the oddball Republican
passionately against torture. The reason is simple: McCain, whose suffering at
the hands of the Vietnamese is legend, knows how really humiliating and
biologically messy torture is. He may be a militarist; he still wants
absolutely nothing to do with it. It was instructive to watch Bill O'Reilly
debate McCain on the torture report. What soon became clear was that O'Reilly
with all his bullying brusqueness didn't have a clue what McCain knew in his
viscera and bones, and O'Reilly was not willing or able to stretch to imagine
it. He was a "patriot," and it would be like allying himself with
"America haters on the far left" to even question the CIA. His position,
like every other defender of the CIA, was based totally on authority, not
evidence. CIA defenders all wanted to know why the Senate investigators didn't
interview CIA leaders and include their remarks. One good answer is because the
Senate report implied they were all liars.

I've always been of the school that passive, incurious citizens need
to have their noses rubbed in horrors done in their name but kept hidden from
them. The classic case, of course, was those camps and the horrible smells in
Germany and Poland. Sergeant Schultz was the perfect joke when he would say, "I
see nah-think!"

This desire of mine to rub noses in the stink from the basement of
our history comes, I think, from being raised by a medical school physiology
professor who liked to point out in his auditorium lectures to incoming
freshman that the next time you're kissing your girl- or boy-friend imagine
you're kissing one end of a 26-foot tube half full of sh*t. My dad was
notorious for this. They loved the crudeness of his lectures, which kept them
awake. Dad was also famous in the Grant household for the brown, splotchy leg
bone with the aging manila tag on it that said "Made In Japan." He'd cut it
from a corpse on Peleliu and dangled it below his PT boat so little fishes
could clean it. It's now in my living room bookcase. Collecting Japanese skulls
and bones was the rage then. While we're on the topic, dad also told his three
sons (I was probably 10 then) about the Marines on Peleliu who had strung
Japanese scrotums inside their quarters as Christmas decorations. I asked him
about that scene once when he was a bent-over old man of 86. It jarred him a
bit, but I was his son, so that kind of shock was part of the training. He was
quiet for a moment as he resurrected the scene in his mind. A thorough atheist,
my dad then muttered: "God, that's horrible."

I've always been grateful that my warped ol' dad shared that scene
with his sons with a cynical, worldly chuckle -- as if to say, brace yourselves,
boys; it's ugly out there. For me, it forever precluded a romantic or glorified
posture toward war. The irony for him was, as a pro-war advocate he didn't
intend the tale to poison the well, which the scene helped do for his middle
son. If war meant tossing out the window all rules of human decency, then I was
going to stand up for those rules.

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For me, a war profiteer/politician like Dick Cheney is an example of
the scum that rises to the surface in wars: On the outside, he's avuncular,
soft and concerned about his own comfort and safety; inside, he harbors a
selfish and cold-blooded psychopath. That he now so comfortably defends torture
only reinforces his malevolence.

When Cheney was asked on TV whether the Enhanced Interrogation
Techniques used were all approved by the White House legal team, he said yes.
When he was asked about rectal feeding and re-hydration, he twitched and his
face blanched and he said, "No, not that one." Why is that one any different
from water boarding, one might ask. After all, it's just the other end of my
dad's 26-foot tube. It's because, on a human, psychological level it's one of
the most universally humiliating things one can do, especially to a male. It's
called "rape," the dirty little secret of American prisons and the American
military. The point of rape is not to get information. All the crap-talk about
obtaining vital information about "ticking bombs" and whatnot is revealed as
dishonest cover when the rectal torture is mentioned. Let's not talk about
that. When men get to sticking hoses up other men's rectums, the point is
clearly to degrade and humiliate the person. Think of those cops in New York
who tore up a Black man's guts with a toilet plunger. To use prison lingo,
they're doing it "to punk" another male.

The New York Times reported that members of the CIA pro-torture
fraternity referred to those who opposed using torture and preferred a method
that emphasized developing rapport as employing "sissified" techniques.
Developing rapport with another human being was how sissies got information. As
Cheney put it sarcastically on TV, "What should we have done kiss them on both
cheeks?"

The exceptional United States of America had been shamed by ignorant
desert peasants, and it was important to physically and psychologically
humiliate them. It was important, one, for US agents who needed to
psychologically regain the sense of imperial omnipotence shaken by the 9/11
attacks. And, two, it was important to psychologically break one-by-one the
arrogance of these feudalistic Allah freaks who thought they could attack the
great icon of modernity, the United States of America. Instead of analyzing why
the attacks were made and dealing with the attackers as international
criminals, Cheney sent the nation to "the dark side," which only made matters
worse. Our torture and murder campaign in Anbar province led to the rise of
ISIS. The CIA administrator of the torture program, Jose Rodriquez, makes it
clear in his defense of torture that the most important issue at stake is personal
honor. Like any nationalistic soldier-zealot who violates the rules of decency
(think Oliver North), he needs to see himself as a hero, even a martyr if
necessary, for doing so.

I'm a 68-year-old American who served in Vietnam as a naive 19-year-old kid. From that moment on, I've been studying and re-thinking what US counter-insurgency war means. I live outside of Philadelphia, where I'm a writer, photographer and (more...)